A Tale of Three Markets
If you want to understand why Martin Shkreli is nervous about the direction of American economic policy, just look at the numbers. On Tuesday, the controversial investor posted a comparison on X that tells a pretty stark story about equity market performance across different regulatory environments.
From 1990 to today, spanning more than 35 years, US stocks have delivered 8.7% annually. That's the kind of compounding that builds real wealth over time. Meanwhile, Japanese equities managed just 0.7% yearly over the same period, and France generated only 0.6% annually over the past 25 years.
The "Pharma Bro," as Shkreli is widely known, sees this gap as anything but coincidental. He's framing it as the direct result of policy choices, with the weaker European and Japanese returns reflecting more restrictive, intervention-heavy regulatory approaches compared to the lighter touch historically seen in America.
The Progressive Warning
Shkreli's broader point centers on what he sees as the rising influence of progressive Democratic policymakers. He specifically called out Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.), Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-VT), Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-NY), New York City Mayor-Elect Zohran Mamdani, and Lina Khan, the former Commissioner of the Federal Trade Commission.
His message was simple and blunt: the more these leaders are allowed to shape and influence policy, "the more our returns will look like theirs," referring to those disappointing French and Japanese market results.
Tech Leaders Pile On
Shkreli isn't alone in his criticism of modern progressive economic thinking. Alex Karp, CEO of Palantir Technologies Inc. (PLTR), recently went after the progressive movement with his own pointed critique, arguing that it is "clearly not progressive."
Karp offered his own definition of real progressivism: "the working class [does] better tomorrow than they did today and know it." He pointed to years of unchecked immigration as having suppressed wages and undermined worker protections, contrary to what progressive policies claim to achieve.
Joe Lonsdale, Palantir's co-founder, took aim even more directly at former FTC chair Lina Khan, calling her a "total radical" for her aggressive stance against big businesses. "She's a bully," he said, adding that "She's trying to apply theories the courts have consistently struck down."
The debate touches on a fundamental question about American capitalism: how much regulation is too much, and at what point do worker protections and corporate oversight start eating into the very wealth creation they're meant to distribute more fairly? Shkreli's numbers suggest he thinks we're approaching that tipping point.